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Sponiebr

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Posts posted by Sponiebr

  1. 8 hours ago, Ramr said:

    So, are you suggesting that I need to, in effect, kiln dry my lumber? I am skeptical. How much water can be contained in that thin, thin wood? It's GOT to be popcorn dry by virtue of how thin it is. Me thinks.

     

    So later today when I pound sticks with a hammer, then lay them on a cookie sheet in the oven and bake them Hub will think  a) I have lost my mind  b) dinner is going to be tough and dry and consist mostly of fibre? He has had several such dinners over our life together so he won't be surprised, but is always fearful.

    Hmmm. No, you don't want to kiln dry the wood... You want to deep fat fry the wicks in oil or wax.
    Now just what precisely do I mean by that?
    I mean heat up some mineral oil or wax and treat the wicks as though they were food and fry them until you get no more bubbles out of the wicks... The deep fat fry method also gets the oil or wax soaked into the wood so that moisture doesn't get back in there... 

    WHY would I suggest that because wood is like DRY right?  You know that lovely snap, crackle, pop you get out of your camp fire? Well that same effect can be had out of your baked, or kiln dried, or non-deep fat fried wood wicks also! However, in the wood wicks it will likely occur without the lovely extra fire to relight your wick and in very close proximity to molten wax. These lovely snap, crackle, pops do a lovely job of decorating everything around them with wax spatter. ETA: So, yeah the wood IS popcorn dry and it WILL behave just like popcorn.  

    I'm not tell'n... I'm just say'n...

    YMWV... 

    • Like 1
  2. 5 hours ago, Ramr said:

    Thank you. I won't give up just yet. Will try your bash and soak suggestion.  Will report what I find.

    That's the SPIRIT! Git in there and give them sticks HELL!!!
    GET MAD!
    YEAH!
    I don't want your damned LEMONS!
    YEAH!!! 
    What am I supposed to do with these!?  (Oh, sorry... I got a little excited there.)  

    I might have mentioned this but, if I didn't, the concept of BOILING all of the molecular water out of the wicks is important... You will be a happier camper if you deep fat fry the water out of the smashed up wood... Just a suggestion.

    lemons_by_levi88-d3igck6.thumb.png.f52667b371cb651bbd1df3cfb362eae1.png

    • Haha 1
  3. 9 hours ago, Ana Lora said:

    For 3 years I have been making Sea Salt Soap (CP), using the formula of 80% coconut oil, 8% Castor oil and 12% olive oil, all with 20% SF. I mix the lye with the water and add it to the oils at room temperature, add dye and essential oil and finally the coarse salt, pour the mixture into the mold and about 2 hours later I cut the it into small bars.
    But my coconut oil supplier sent me a slightly darker oil that works well in the rest of the formulas but, apparently, in the salt soap is a disaster.
    I have made the same formula without changing anything but Now when adding the salt the water starts to separate from the soap. I have varied the temperature of both the lye and the oils, colder, hotter and the result is always the same. I have mixed everything for a longer time so that a false trace does not happen, but the mix separates when adding the salt, just before pouring into the mold. Everything seems to be related to the salt that is added at the end (I'm using the same brand as always).
    When talking with the coconut oil supplier he tells me that he makes soap and that the new oil does not give him any problems.
    I live in a country with serious difficulties and it is impossible to change providers. The others that are sold at excessively expensive prices and produce without any ethical standards.
    Has something similar happened to you? Do you have any idea what is happening in this case? If the coconut oil were adulterated could this happen?
    my salt soap is the best sold among all my formulas, I'm a little desperate!

    Wow... YEah this sounds really weird to me. How has the humidity been while you are making these salt bars? Not that it would make any difference... I was just wondering... 

    I think your key statement here was "darker" and then you immediately wrote "oil" but you did not write "coconut oil", though I inferred that is what you meant... I'm just guessing, that it's that oil that you are being sold as "coconut oil" that is in fact NOT pure coconut oil but probably some horrible blend of a "little bit" of coconut oil and some other terrible thing that clearly does not like salt... I'm guessing that your vendor is correct in saying HE ISN'T having problems with the new coconut oil because HE isn't USING it... (technically he wouldn't have been lying either.) Still it's puzzling because it is giving you no problems with the other formulations...  I personally don't have much experience in making salt bars, with like actual salt crystals in them. My soaps have been brine the few times that I have made them. Brine will cause glycerin to separate out... So if the new coconut oil has water in it, that might be an issue that I guess could conceivably cause this. Basically if there is water in the coconut oil it is dissolving your salt and that's why you are getting the separation. Ok... SO you could test this theory out by heating some of the coconut oil in a pot like you are going to deep fry food in it and if it foams up and boils or starts to pop and spatter with nothing in it you've got wet coconut oil. That could also be what is causing the color change... 

    IF it is wet you might dial your water content back and see if it fixes the problem or not. It would help if you had some pure coconut oil that you could use a fixed measure and weight it and then compare the same measured volume to the new darker coconut oil... But if it's an adulterated oil, that has been adulterated with water, the people behind it will most likely have made the same weight to volume as regular coconut oil... 

    Apart from the CO being wet, I haven't got a clue. Let us know what you find out though.   

    HTH, 

    Sponiebr
    The Executor of Bad Ideas and Sundry Services.  
     

  4. 5 minutes ago, Ramr said:

    Yet another update. I think I am defeated by wooden wicks. Even after bashing them with a hammer as per suggested by Mr. Sponiebr.  Nothing is working as planned. Sigh.

    Did you boil them in wax or oil? The wood fibers being spread out is not to get air into the burn (well, it sorta does, but not really... let's not bother with surface area just yet) it's to in crease capillary attraction of the wood fibers so that they pull fuel from the melt pool into the combustion... Without the "pre-loading" they won't wick liquid wax worth a damn because the small amount of the flame that you initially light is just the wood burning and it uses up what would otherwise be the combustion surface that the wax is vaporizing off of...

    Effectively the smashing of these wicks (done before the boiling in wax, or soaking in mineral oil), is to get even strands of wood fibers running unbroken in effectively the same manner that we would see in a string or braided wick. I mean, you can USE a bit of stainless steel braid as a wick and it will work (DON'T DO THIS the wick heats up and can catch the whole container on fire). My point is that it's not really so much the material as it is the mechanics of why and how a wick works that accomplishes the work here. Back when I was a kid there were the cutesy glass candles that weird kitschy  stores used to sell down at the mall where it had a little tear drop shaped bulb with a fiberglass wick and they burned scented lamp oil. In such cases a fiberglass wick is fine because the fuel source is fixed but in a candle we like consumable wicks because they follow the melt pool of the candle as it goes and don't have to be trimmed back while they are on fire every few minutes. Combustible consumable wicks also insulate the heat from the rest of the fuel source, (fiberglass would do this too but it won't follow the melt pool, steel braid will conduct the heat into the fuel (e.g. wax) and heat the whole mess up until YAY! FIREBALL IN MY BEDROOM!!! (not GOOD...) 

    On my experiments, I was burning 100% pure stearic acid (ok NOT PURE there was a drop or 2 of FO in there...) Finding fuels and getting them to burn isn't really the issue, the main issue is balancing the burn rate with the feed rate. If your wicks are too wide they will use up more fuel than they can deliver and go out. If they are too high above the melt pool they will burn more than they can deliver and they will go out. If they are smaller than what they can burn it's fine you will just have a dinky little flame and they will continue to burn unless they aren't burning with enough flame to maintain a melt pool,  in which case they will not be able to feed fuel and, GUESS WHAT... Yeah, they will snuff out. Each time a wood wick snuffs itself due to lack of fuel it will get shorter until you DON'T have enough of the wick to use anymore above the candle surface... Then you can't light them to watch them burn out... 

    BTW I believe you mentioned earlier about using an accelerant? That's not what I was talking about. The naphtha was only to rinse the oil or paraffin out of the wood so that you could replace it after it was dry with your normal pouring wax... NO ACCELERANTS in candles! Bad IDEA... Terrible idea that I wouldn't even do. even though I lay claim to being Mr. Bad Ideas  99.9% of my "bad ideas" work really, really well... 

    Anywho, don't give up... There's a delicate balance to be found here, you just gotta find it. 

    281900157_Doublebalance.thumb.jpg.60e13c4d7a7a905f3cd080947c66f5f9.jpg

    Cheers, 

    Sponiebr
    The Executor of Bad Ideas and Sundry Services 
     

    • Like 1
  5. On 9/3/2018 at 2:38 AM, Ramr said:

    I've been fooling around making my own wooden wicks. Have learned a lot.  Since I am totally new to making candles I don't know that I'm qualified to say much, but here goes.

     

    I have tried to burn, as a wood wick:  the wood ends of match sticks (no), bamboo BBQ skewers (no) soaked the skewers in olive oil (still no) dried pine needles I found on the lawn and twisted together (BAD IDEA!) a thick chunk of cedar kindling I meticulously shaved with an axe that was too big (no, cannot make thin enough strips with that ridiculous monster sized axe) toothpicks, both flat style and round style (no and no) bristles I yanked out of the corn broom I sweep the steps with (no) little round sticks I got at the dollar store which looked really promising but failed utterly.

     

    What I have had some success with:  wooden stir sticks you get at the dollar store. Soaking them in oil is not necessary. The trick, for me, has been taking an exacto knife (utility knife) and scoring a thin line the length of the stick. This miniscule groove helps wick melted wax up towards the flame, or so I have convinced myself. But I do burn candles with wicks of this design.

     

    I make votives and find a whole stir stick is too much wick for a votive. Even though they are narrow to begin with, cut them down to half their width is plenty for a votive. A full width stir stick can easily work in a 3 inch diameter candle. (at least with the wax I am using, IGI # 1245). I did some experimenting with splitting a stir stick in half and laying them on top of each other as a two layer wick, so wax could wick up the space between. This is fiddly to do, doesn't work unless your stir sticks are perfectly flat and often they are not, there are lots of deformed stir sticks in a dollar store package. I abandoned the double idea, don't need to double up.  

     

    I also bought a package of craft sticks that are the size of the tongue depressor your doctor uses. Have made wicks with these. They make HUGE wicks! Scored a few times to improve wax uptake.  Did test burn tonight in a 3x3 square candle, on a pie plate, full tongue depressor wick, melt pool to edge in about 30 minutes. If this candle was in an enclosed holder it would have melted even faster. I could have cut this tongue depressor in half (long way) and it still would have been plenty of wick for this 3x3 square. 

     

    I have no wick holders for these. Improvised. Squirted hot glue blobs onto tinfoil and then stuck a stir stick (split long ways) in. When it was cool, peeled it off the tinfoil and there you have a wooden wick with a flat bottomed blob at the end. Do not know yet what will happen when everything melts down and flame hits glue glob. I have also glue gunned a wooden wick to a penny and used that in the candle. OR... I just stick the wick down into cooling wax, no bottom, and when it is burned down to 1/2 inch or so, the wick drops over, goes out and I like to think of it as a safety feature that it self extinguishes before you burn the candle dry. I may be wrong about that - time will tell I guess, but so far my untabbed wood wicks have all fallen over eventually in the last bit of wax and snuffed out.

     

    Wood is a varied material and some burn well, others not so much. Some make a sputtering noise that I find hilarious. Also some send up tiny little embers, like a mini campfire. They also need to be carefully trimmed. Too long and they don't perform well. I clip mine with a fingernail clipper, taking off just a hair at a time.

     

     

    OH! KEWL!!!! 

    Okay so, I'm NOT a chandler BUT, I AM a total pyro! Quite literally actually, as my whole family is in professional pyrotechnics. NOT THE POINT! 

    So, as you have correctly deduced the surface tension thing is rather important to getting the wicking action down. ALL of the above will work fine as wood wicks but for one tiny, teeny-weeny, super easy, modification.  You ready? I'm fiddna give you the SECRET MODIFICATION! 

    You sitting down? 

    Wait for it... 

    (Oh this is gonna be) 

    LEGENDARY!!! 

    Here it is!!! 

    (Drum roll please!!!) 

    HAMMER TIME! 


    (ta-da! ) 

    Are you as impressed with me as I am? 
    Good! 

    Seriously, the popsicle sticks or the bamboo skewers or ANY of these will work it you take a hammer and pound them so that you spread out the wood fibers. Even just a twig out of the yard will work. I found the bamboo skewers (3mm-4mm diameter) to be actually TOO GOOD of a wick. I got HUGE FLAMES off of those things. Next comes the dehydration bit and it's rather important. After you've knocked the fiber out of them, basically you've gotta deep fat fry them in wax of some ilk. I just used paraffin as that was one I could get REALLY hot, but you could use clear mineral oil as well... Hell, you can use any oil or fat you want, as long as you can get the temperature up to the point that when you put the stick into the hot oil/fat/wax it begins to bubble. After you get the oil up to that temperature just fry them in that until you get no more bubbles. If you used mineral oil then take them out and dry them out on a bed of paper towels and (if you REALLY wanted to get'm clean), Soak in a bath of naphtha and blot dry a few times. Or just blot them dry and soak in some hot wax of your choice. They'll come clean with that naphtha pretty quick and then you will have pristine wood wicks to dip with your scented wax of your choice. Make no mistake about it though, a priming with a wax is necessary for the wood wicks to burn reliably later on. 

    The real trick here is to get a uniform fiber density and a uniform width. You may only need to smack them once or twice, some you may want to pound the living bejesus out of. Ideally you would have a mangle or other roller type arraignment set up that would roll and break up the wood fibers under a specific weight every time. Another handy wood that works VERY well with minimal effort and is usually pre-cut to specific widths and has a very uniform fiber density is balsa wood. Like 1/16 in thick light density balsa strips are sometimes good to go with no modification. 

    Base tabs are just TOO easy. I tried making tabs out of soda cans and blah, blah, blah too damned much WORK! I get a baggie of those micro sized binder clips and put one of those at the bottom and then just remove the little wire bail handles (just a pinch in the middle near the base (clip side) of the wire bail and they come right out. You can then put a dab of silicone caulking at the bottom of the clip and glue it inside your jar. 

    Cost wise: Well, you tell me... $1 for 100 popsicle sticks and $1 for 10-12 binder clips (sometimes there are more in a pack I haven't bought any in a LONG time) 

    The bamboo skewers are VERY promising if you can get the burn rate dialed in.

    As for me, I've got soap to make... 


    giphy.gif
       



       
    HTH! 

    Slainte, 
    Sponiebr
    The Executor of Bad Ideas and Sundry Services 

  6. On 8/31/2018 at 2:37 PM, Scented said:

    It has been years since I have soaped and I feel like a beginner again but something strange happened yesterday. I made a batch of lilac and the batter turned brownish purple on me using Peak's oil. Granted the fragrance oil was an orangish red, but to change the entire batch to a brownish purple when there's no vanilla in the fragrance oil just caught me off guard. 

    Still, I've soaped this fragrance many times and not had that happen. I went ahead and continued to color it and the purple and pink in it so far remain unaffected. The log is too soft to unwrap and I guess I'll see what happens to it. 

     

    So I got to thinking what other colors could pop up out there and alter the look of the soap. It's always been an instant yellow that gravitates to darker yellow and then brown when a fragrance has vanilla in it. Any others? 

    Well... It depends a lot on what the colorant was. Oxides, can morph in the presence of lye. Yellows and oranges made from iron oxide being the worst offenders but hydrated ultramarine, tin and manganese oxide purples can roll to varying shades of gray and blue also. IME Oranges won't shift back once they get that crappy brown muted look, but I've had yellows turn from infant poop brown back to a seemingly pleasant-ish yellow after they've cured. Vegetable colorants can go ALL OVER the map. Alkanet could be pink, gray, blue, purple, brown, just whatever it feels like at the moment...  FWIW I didn't have almost any issues with oxide morphs in HP, mostly I suspect, because the colorants were added after the cook and after I added the FO so I could adjust as needed. Even though I know it should have happened I can't remember ever getting any serious vanilin browns with the HP either... If I know for a fact I'm headed for a vanilin brown I try and incorporate the brown into the actual coloring scheme, like with my pumpkin pie scented soap I will not add the FO to the highlighted portion of the soap and I'll add just a little yellow to the main body of soap so that it ends up turning a pumpkin pie brown and the orange ends up looking like bits of pumpkin... (I'm good at shooting around walls too...:rolleyes:)   

    I see I haven't actually answered anything... (Tsk, tsk... Well, that's just typical...) So, yeah vanilin isn't you're only color changer, the alkalinity and the type of colorant can cause the color changes, some of which are permanent and some temporary... 

    Yeah... Imma go cut some lemons up...  

    HTH! 

    Sponiebr
    The Executor of Bad Ideas and Sundry Services

  7. 3 hours ago, Trappeur said:

    Thankyou BF and yes I'm putting it to rest as you said.  And yes that supplier is a wonderful one I can't deny that...Things happen....put it behind which I'm doing just that.

     

    Trappeur

    YEAH! I like BF's idea! Go get lit in a tunnel! <<<<<<-------------------Now THAT's a PLAN! 

     

    • Haha 1
  8. 29 minutes ago, Trappeur said:

    lol, you always tickle me with all these hilarious words (whorehouse chamber pot) in sayings that I have never heard of Sponey.....

    Miss you on the board...where have you been? ..undoubtedly under some vehicle heap fixing it up

     

    Thanks 

     

    Trappeur

    It might interest you to know that am the sound of rain upon the.... 

    No, that's not it... 

    Oh! I know... I haven't been under a car... (much)
    Nope! I've been make'n soap. (and some side lined abominations... )

    I'm tryna check in on CS at least a few times a day. Next we work me back up to actually writing on the boards everyday... 

    tenor.gif
     

    • Haha 1
  9. 5 hours ago, ScentedPleasurez said:

    So they are lying to their potential customers from the jump.   Nothing good will come from it Trapp. Sit back and just watch it happen

    AMEN! 
    @Trappeur To hell with them! I wouldn't dump out a whorehouse chamber pot on them if they were on fire. They should be STRONGLY encouraged to go BACK from whatever rock they crawled out from.  

    (I AM being nice, but this PISSES me off to NO end!) 

    • Like 2
  10. Sooooo, my MOTHER shoves a used bar of soap (not a soap I made by the by...) up in my face yesterday as I was getting ready for Church. She want's to know what was in it... I smelled her coming into the room reeking of Patchouli.

    ME:"That's patchouli mom." 

    MOM: "Oh, well I really like the smell, can you make it?"

    Me: "Yeah I can as soon as I get the Indonesian EO. BUT If I MAKE THIS FOR YOU... I'm MAKING it in YOUR KITCHEN!" 



    So the upshot is where are all'y'all Getting your Dark Indonesian Patch from?  (would anyone have about 4 ounces to spare?) 

     

     

    TFTH!

    Cheers, 
    Sponiebr
    The Executor of Bad Ideas and Sundry Services. 

  11. 1 hour ago, Bia said:

     

    TallTayl,

     

    After the candle has been used up, can the wick tab be removed at all and if so, how?

     

    I usually use wick tabs but they do not glue sometimes and I really like your idea, but I need to make sure the customer can take off the tab after burning the entire candle to use the jar for other things.  I don't want the tab to be so superbonded to the glass or ceramic jar that the jar will be ruined while the customer tries to remove the tab.

    @scrubzz@Kerven@LightMyCandleCo@moonshine

    For anyone using silicone: The silicone can be softened up by soaking in a little Naphtha (Ronsonol/Zippo Lighter fluid, Coleman Liquid camp stove fuel). Brake cleaner or even nail polish remover will work in a pinch. The naphtha will soften ALL types of silicone rubbers.   

    • Thanks 1
  12. 4 hours ago, ncraiders said:

    on the  round mold one your non symbol formula looks to be missing the x 0.43 at the end isn't it?

     

    4 hours ago, Candybee said:

    I was close. I remembered my formula for column/slab molds was something like L x W x H x 4 = oil wt. It was the 4 that was throwing me. Its .43. Thanks.

     

    Okay I have to have an easier non math symbol formula for round molds. I remember L (length) x radius x radius = oil wt. But isn't something missing?

     

     

    You're missing your dessert... 

    Here's a serving with some ice cream on top. 


    1561735113_pialamode.jpg.b7ffd5c71dbc540908cbd61c558c5e68.jpg

    Yes. It's PI a la mode...  

    • Haha 3
  13. I use V*.43= Oils in oz. 

    So 12x12X2 mold would be: 288*.43= 123.84 oz. (124 oz.) 

    3.5*2.75*12= 115.5*.43= 49.665

    Volume for a tube: 
    V = π*r2*h*.43 (radius is 1/2 diameter or D*.5) 

    SO! 3" x12" column mold: 3*.5= 1.5
    1.5*1.5=2.25
    2.25*3.1416*12=84.8232 
    84.82.32*.43= 36.473976 

    HTH!

    Sponiebr
    The Executor of Bad Ideas and Sundry Services

  14. 10 hours ago, Pam W said:

    Not being a soap  maker from scratch, I have to say that you are confusing yourself with too much info.  There is so much info on the net that we can get confusioned on our end goal.

    Sometimes we need to go back to the basics and go from there.  There are times when we 'newbies" get ahead of ourselves and then can't figure out what went wrong.

     

    1197.gif

    I'm not exactly a newbie, but OK, yeah, I am confused... 

    • Like 1
  15. 45 minutes ago, moonshine said:

    Thanks executor of bad ideas for the ideas 😂

    Red gasket sealer in my parts is under 5.00 a tube and lasts a really long time- I didn’t think that was expensive 🤔

     

    so this silicone caulking....is that a permanent stick and okay for high temps? I’m not versed in these type of things and went with it based off many on here using it successfully 

    I went and pulled up the spec sheet for the GE 100% silicone II Window and Door Sealant (The link is below), and it's showing 400F as the maximum temperature for elasticity which is to say that's the maximum that they guarantee it maintaining structural integrity. So, yeah... If your roof gets up to 400F your skylight will stay sealed, the shingles and roof will have slid off, but that skylight will be water tight!----- Dammit! 

    Red Permatex RTV's max is 600F continuous. Permatex's claim to fame is that it is supposed to stand up to hot fuel and oil as well as high temperatures. For engines it's required, for candles, meh... Kinda like bringing a Howitzer to a turkey shoot. 
    So <$5 for 3 oz. or $4.47 for 10 oz... If it was me, I'd be willing to try it out to see if it was as good as the permatex at least... I'd be willing to bet the clear silicone could withstand the wick burning right down to the tab without any deterioration. The clear would look better at the bottom of a glass jar too, (Y'know if you took the sticker off and actually looked at the bottom of the jar)  

    https://www.builditsolar.com/References/Caulks/Silicone II Window &amp; Door - TDS[1].pdf

     

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  16. On 7/10/2018 at 11:50 AM, moonshine said:

    I used to use wick stickers and still do for my test candles BUT they are not permanent and do have potential to come loose and slide while burning especially if you get a real hot burning candle - I have heard enough horror stories to now use permatex gasket sealer in all my sale jars - nothing is making that come off and it’s seriously easier and faster to do than wick stickers - you don’t have to do all that pushing down to make sure it’s stuck

    A small glob is all that is needed and stick it and when it dries it isn’t moving  - I haven’t even been able to get them loose with pliers hence why I use the stickers still for all my tests 

    You can find it in auto or hardware stores and it’s red in color and not expensive - found out about it on here somewhere in a thread 



    Ok... (YIKES!) Wow! Yeah, um, High temp Permatex will work fine, but it's EXPENSIVE (at least compared to other alternatives). 
    And now for the disclaimer:
    I DON'T MAKE CANDLES, so you are forewarned. 

    I DO make a LOT of other things that have high temps and (ok, I'll just say it: I use non "standard" stuff in fixing cars all the time.) It's the knowing WHERE and WHEN you can use a non standard part or adhesive is really key but knowing WHAT the materials are made of... Oh; that is the real magic.  I really like to approach things like this as though I were a monster sized factory making product "X". How would they go about sticking their tabs into the jars? Why are THEY able to do this and I'm NOT? Unless it's a synthesizing materials situation, I find that 99% of the time I can do it almost exactly the same way that the factory does it. I can just about guarantee that "BIG CANDLE INC" is using a solvent based adhesive to stick wick tabs down (if they stick them down at all).  

    If you really want a Type 2 Silicone adhesive to stick your candle wicks down just get a squeeze tube (or get a caulking gun tube if you're in mass production) of clear Type II 100% silicone caulking. It'll work FINE, and a tube will last you probably 10 lifetimes. (You will have to keep it properly sealed and all.) 

    Just out of curiosity, why aren't all y'all using a contact cement like "Weldwood"? Yeah, it's got all kinds of nasty solvents in it and junk, but we're talking about a dot in the bottom of the jar and a dot on the tab, not bathing in the stuff like me. I'd do all the jar bottoms in one shot and then do all of the tabs, by the time you are done with the last tab everything will be ready to stick together and BOOM! Yer done.  You could leave them in the sun for a day to gas off if you are concerned about the smell.  (Small disclaimer: rubber can deteriorate over time when used exclusively with petroleum based products *e.g.: paraffin.*)  

    Anyway, just thought  I'd offer those alternatives if it could help. Also, if you are going to stay with the Permatex, ( or any of the above suggestions) go with Walmart. I hate them as much as any human, but they DO have the best prices I've ever seen on adhesives. 


    HTH!

    Cheers,
    Sponiebr
    The Executor of Bad Ideas and Sundry Services

     

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  17. Excerpt from the article:

    "When I read 'occult,' I think, OK, they don't want me to sell unbaptized baby blood or like, they don't want me to say, 'Buy this chicken and I'll sacrifice it for you,'" Katie said. "I get that and maybe you shouldn't sell that on the internet anyway."


    Yeah, MAYBE baby blood might not be the best thing to sell on the internet... I mean at LEAST not on the OPEN web. Darknet, sure. You can get anything on unlisted services. :laugh2:

    Still, Whiskey Tango Foxtrot on banning any sort of craft items? Chargebacks? Really!? Uh, no... 
    Makes no sense to me at all. 

    • Like 3
    • Haha 1
  18. 822209405_yalldontbewashnyomolds.jpg.bd833edc71d762fdaadf0a89dee08349.jpg

     

     

    In all seriousness I appreciate the input. It appears I have a "personal" problem... (If you can call OCD a personal problem) I will work on this!  It's gonna be hard NOT to wash them...I'm flip'n out just thinking about not washing them. XANAX!!! STAT!!!! 

    • Like 1
  19. My molds aren't exactly your average wood mold. They're adjustable to any length within their maximum range down to 0.0 pour space. You can even adjust them as you are actually pouring. Let's say you have too much soap for a particular pour, you can lengthen the mold to accommodate the additional soap in the middle of the pour. Shortening the mold length during a pour is a little more tricky, but it can be done. Anyway, the floating end blocks are particularly susceptible to cracking and I had to keep the end blocks from splitting as they were already starting to crack. I decided I can't afford the DOS risk, so I just made up some more of my mineral oil and beeswax wood sealer.  

  20. @Trappeur I stink at explaining... then of course my fingers get oil on them and I am constantly washing them.   I'll bet I didn't make one lick of sense here......

    It's the SKUNK what's do'n it to ya... Poor Trapp all flustered and covered in FO... 


    And @TallTayl YAS!!!! This is the GOLDEN secret! 
     


     

  21. 12 hours ago, Sarah S said:

    The laundry soap is my fave! I love the ghost swirl!

    Is the Serendipity HP? How do you get those delicate swirls??

    Yep, all except my laundry soap are high temperature fluid hot process. Basically you can get HP to be really fluid by adding in sodium lactate, your superfat, and extra water content at the right points in the cook. Add them too early, it seizes, add them too fast or cold and it seizes... They do shrink some during the "cure" at this point, but I'm working on balancing the method a bit more on the dry side.

    Valerie Mosher is where I learned about this method. 

      

     

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